Mass movement has a way of making you go 'whoa,' whether it's a military parade, an Olympic opening ceremony, or a really committed flash mob. Australian choreographer Stephanie Lake knows this, and her 2018 piece Colossus has been stomping its way around the globe ever since. Now it's landed in the UK with 60 students from the London Contemporary Dance School, which is enough bodies to fill the Queen Elizabeth Hall stage and generate a noticeable breeze. When they all run at once, it feels like you're standing next to a giant fan.

Over 50 tight minutes, Lake explores what a crowd can mean: a melee, a mob, a team, an audience, a flock obeying a conductor, or a gang chasing a victim. The power dynamics shift throughout, while the dancers move in perfect unison - bodies laid in a circle pulse like a speaker diaphragm. The logistics are impressive, with six factions dancing syncopated rhythms simultaneously. It's not as emotionally rich as Crystal Pite's work, but it's watchable, readable, and a whole lot of fun.